Con-ri-sonanza: Works by Thomas Simaku Joseph Houston & Quatuor Diotima
Album Info
Album Veröffentlichung:
2020
HRA-Veröffentlichung:
06.11.2020
Label: BIS
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Interpret: Joseph Houston & Quatuor Diotima
Komponist: Thomas Simaku (1958)
Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)
- Thomas Simaku (b. 1958): Catena I:
- 1 Catena I: I. Andante remoto, con espressione 04:16
- 2 Catena I: II. Furioso 01:32
- 3 Catena I: III. Scorrevole 00:38
- 4 Catena I: IV. Spaziale 02:29
- 5 Catena I: V. Energico, tempo preciso 03:38
- String Quartet No. 5:
- 6 String Quartet No. 5: I. Spaziale - Adagio doloroso, desolato, sempre spaziale 06:20
- 7 String Quartet No. 5: IIa. Vigoroso, preciso - Quasi angelico - Vigoroso brutale 05:08
- 8 String Quartet No. 5: IIb. Sospeso - Più mosso - Ancora più mosso 04:56
- Thomas Simaku:
- 9 L'image oubliée d'après Debussy 07:08
- 10 Con-ri-sonanza 12:59
- 11 Hommage à Kurtág 07:47
- String Quartet No. 4:
- 12 String Quartet No. 4: I. Adagio remoto - Allegro preciso 04:00
- 13 String Quartet No. 4: II. Calmo - Ritmico 04:43
- 14 String Quartet No. 4: Interlude I 01:33
- 15 String Quartet No. 4: III. Lento assai 04:08
- 16 String Quartet No. 4: Interlude II 00:48
- 17 String Quartet No. 4: IV. Adagio remoto, scorrevole 06:51
Info zu Con-ri-sonanza: Works by Thomas Simaku
Born in Albania in 1958, Thomas Simaku studied composition at the State Conservatory of Music in Tirana. He moved to England in 1991, where he was able to immerse himself in the music that had been banned in his native country, and especially that of Ligeti and Kurtág. This, as well as his earlier experience of working with Albanian folk musicians, had a lasting effect on his own music but as Simaku himself puts it: when it comes to creativity, one should at least try to speak with ones voice, however small that might be. He often composes for specific performers and the present album highlights his collaborations with Quatuor Diotima and with the pianist Joseph Houston. Catena I, the opening work as well as the most recent one on the programme, was written for Houston, while the String Quartets Nos. 4 and 5 were destined for Diotima, of which Simaku has said that one cannot fail to notice their individual and sensitive approach to sound and color, and their huge range of expression. I have tried to embody these idiosyncratic qualities in both quartets. Houston also plays two works written by Simaku as tokens of his respect for two composer colleagues: Limage oubliée daprès Debussy and Hommage à Kurtág. These frame the piano quintet con-ri-sonanza which has also given its name to the entire album, after the sonic qualities it embodies: consonanza, risonanza, con risonanza ...
Joseph Houston, piano
Quatuor Diotima
Joseph Houston
is a British pianist active in the fields of contemporary and experimental music. Based in Berlin, Joseph performs regularly in festivals and venues across Europe both as a soloist and with other artists. He particularly enjoys projects which involve collaborating closely with composers and other performers, including recently with: Christian Wolff, Lore Lixenberg, Louis D’Heudieres, Rolf Hind, Nomi Epstein, Mark Barden, Stephen Crowe, Catherine Lamb, and Christian Mason. He is principal pianist with the Octandre Ensemble, a London-based new music group focusing on music written since 1945.
Joseph aims to curate unique and immersive programmes that combine works from various musical genres, generating a whole that is bigger than the sum of its parts, while involving himself as much as possible in the compositional process of new commissions. He believes music is fundamentally collaborative and is particularly interested in works that challenge the traditional composer-performer-listener triangle; new or unusual notation practices; and pieces that intensely explore the sonic possibilities of the instrument. He works on a project-by-project basis, building programmes that explore these ideas.
After undergraduate studies at the University of York – receiving a first-class BA in Music and the Wilfrid Mellers Prize for outstanding academic achievement – Joseph attended the Royal College of Music, London, where he was awarded the Frank Merrick Prize, 2nd Prize in the Beethoven Piano Competition, and an MMus in Advanced Performance with distinction.
Soon after leaving the RCM he was selected for Making Music's Philip and Dorothy Green Award for young concert artists; received 2nd Prize in the British Contemporary Piano Competition; won a Help Musicians UK 'Emerging Excellence' award; and gained a place on City Music Foundation's young artist scheme. He was also chosen as a Park Lane Group Young Artist in 2013, which led to his debut solo recitals at the Purcell Room and Wigmore Hall, performing works by Scriabin, Michael Zev Gordon, Beethoven, Thomas Simaku, Charlotte Bray, Colin Matthews, and Debussy. Joseph has performed as a soloist with various orchestras, playing music ranging from Brahms’ 1st Piano Concerto and Tchaikovsky’s 1st Piano Concerto, to Messiaen’s 'Turangalîla-Symphonie' and John Cage's 'Concert for Piano and Orchestra'. In recent years he has performed all over Europe at venues and festivals such as the Akademie der Künste (Berlin), Ухо Festival (Kiev, Ukraine), the BBC Proms, Summartónar Festival (Faroe Islands), and Lilles Piano(s) Festival. His playing has been broadcast on BBC Radio 3, 4, and 6 Music, Radio Cemat Rome, France Musique, SWR2, and SRF Radio.
Recent performances include Cat Lamb’s ‘Prisma Interius VIII’ at the Berlin Biennale, duos with Sarah Saviet (violin) at Radialsystem as part of Sasha Waltz's ZUHÖREN, and solo performances at Donaueschinger Musiktage 2019. Future projects include a CD of Thomas Simaku's chamber music with Quartor Diotima, to be released on BIS; a portrait CD of composer Mark Barden, to be released on WERGO; and performances throughout 2020 of Feldman's 'Patterns in a Chromatic Field' with Lucy Railton in Berlin, Paris, Copenhagen, and London.
Booklet für Con-ri-sonanza: Works by Thomas Simaku